It feels like such a long time ago
since our learning journey to the Big Island!
I was extremely nervous to start my second year of teaching but it I
feel that it has been going pretty good.
I feel much more organized and a little less stressed since I have gone
through the curriculum once already. I
also started using interactive notebooks in my classes which I feel really
helps my students and myself with organization.
One of my colleagues
and good friends, Jo-Hanna Valdez, and I were designated with the immense task
of create a field trip for the entire math department. This wouldn’t be so bad if there weren’t
approximately two thousand students what would be going on this field
trip. What we have decided to do so far
is to split the students up by grades.
Freshman and sophomores will be going on a service learning field trip
and the juniors and seniors will go to a job and career fair.
For the
Juniors and Seniors, we want to have the job and career fair off campus if
possible to make the experience more appealing too the students. James Campbell High School has many
partnerships and we would like ask them to participate in our job and career
fair to show case how they use mathematics in their line of work. Also we want to showcase a wide variety of
possible careers to our students that they could consider after high school or
college.
Our freshmen
and sophomores will bee going on a service learning experience during term 3. We are currently working on getting a count
of how many algebra I, geometry/MOW (modeling our world), and algebra II
students we have that are Freshmen and Sophomores so we can find a venue that
can accommodate us. We contacted Kupu
and they recommended contacting the Waianae Watershed Partnership. I looked at their website and I think it
would be a great place to take them on our side of the island. Also I figured out that since we would be
going in term 3, we can integrate how watersheds work into the Algebra I
curriculum by using systems of equations to determine approximately how much
water gets to the ocean while considering equations for the rate of rainfall,
the approximate amount of water absorbed in the soil. Algebra II teachers can also incorporate the
function of a watershed to systems of equations. Geometry/MOW teachers can possibly
incorporate volume and/or trig ratios.
If anyone
has been to a Waianae Watershed Partnership site please let me know how it went
and what you and your students did there.
That would be greatly appreciated!
Though we
are having a hard time even just starting to plan. We are currently just struggling to get an
accurate count of all the students taking each mathematical subject. We have sent out emails and had a sign in at
the last math department meeting and we still have only gotten fourteen out of
about forty math teachers to give us their student counts. Also we need to sort out which algebra II
classes are freshmen and sophomores. We
currently want to get an accurate count before we contact the Waianae Watershed
Partnership so we can figure out how many students/classes can go on the field
trip a day and how many days we are looking at overall. Also to find a venue for the job and career
fair for our juniors and seniors. If
anyone has a better strategy to get teachers to cooperate and give us a count of
their students please help.
Congrats on making it to year two! Its nice to have a sense of feeling for the class and know what you tried before and have more room to make changes once you've gotten a feel for the curriculum. The field trips sound awesome! I can't imagine trying to round up 2000 kids, I had a hard enough time getting 105 5th graders to the planetarium! These sound like great opportunities thought. I especially like the Watershed project idea. Its a great way to connect place to their learning and putting a practical aspect towards it. Another thought I had could be looking at past, present, and projected future rainfall amounts and looking at how sea level rise and climate change will affect the amount of water that passes through our watershed. (Could also look into BWS tapping the water from the West Side to divert over to Honolulu and see how much our coast has lost due to this).
ReplyDeleteI envision the job fair to be a great success, especially working with current partners and actually having the kids see how math and science are involved past the school level and hope that they can apply what theyʻre learning into a later profession. Teaching is always busy, but it looks like you've got some good stuff going on! Good luck with it!
DJ
Those are awesome ideas DJ!!! Thank you! Truly appreciate the feedback and I will relay this to my co-worker that I'm working with!
DeleteSounds like you have a couple of great field trip plans. Looking forward to hearing how they go. You might want to try your registrar to get the counts you need for your classes. He/she should be able to give you that info. That's where I go to get mine when I need it. :)
ReplyDeleteGreat idea! Thank you! I just need to buy them some food first lol! The registrar people can be a little grumpy at times.
DeleteAh Janel you beat me to it! Yea get the rosters! Then you can use them for attendance purposes on field trip days etc.
ReplyDeleteThank you Nicole! Also a great idea!
DeleteWell the previous commenters did a wonderful job. I was wondering about one of the last comments. . . .
ReplyDelete"Also we need to sort out which algebra II classes are freshmen and sophomores."
Are all students in Alg 2 (or the majority) either freshmen or sophomores?
Curious,
Darren
Yes, this year Campbell changed the sequencing from:
DeleteAlgebra I to Geometry to Algebra II
to
Algebra I to Algebra II or Geometry/MOW
Last year as Algebra I teachers we were encouraged to send only our low C students to Geometry/MOW and the majority went to Algebra II.
Though the sophomore Algebra II classes have a mixture I believe so I really should have said to separate the freshmen Algebra II students from the upperclassmen Algebra II.
They separated freshmen because we have a Freshmen Academy and Freshmen Teams.
Thanks Ashley. I really appreciate that!!!
ReplyDelete